Mazu Longsha
Mazu Longsha, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ǎ Z ú L ó ngsh ā, which means galloping across the border and gaining power abroad. It comes from ban Dingyuan and pingxiyu.
The origin of Idioms
The first act of the master of Manshu's "ban Ding Yuan Ping the western regions" is: "a tiger's head and a swallow's chin, a man's words are ten thousand li; a horse's feet and a dragon's sand, a man's chest has a long career."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing
Mazu Longsha
the buffaloes in jiangsu pant when they see the moon mistaking it for the hot sun - wú niú chuǎn yuè
Fortune is the beginning of disaster - fú wéi huò shǐ
Horizontal needle and vertical line - héng zhēn shù xiàn
Aconite white, horse born horn - wū tóu bái, mǎ shēng jiǎo